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348 BOOK REVIEW S
R E F E R E NC E S C I T E D
BOROOAH,J .
1955 Folktales of Assam. Gauhati.ZAMAN,Niaz
1985 Animal tales of Bangladesh. Dhaka: Bangla Academy.
Stephen F u c ~ s
Institute of Indian Culture
Bombay, India
INDIA
BECK,BREYDAE. F., collector and translator. Elder Bro thers S to ry : An O r a l
Epic o f Tami l . Folklore of Tamilnadu Series No. 4. Shu Hikosaka and
G. John Samuel, general editors. Madras: Institute of Asian Studies,
1992. Part l/Part 2, xv+vii+ 775 pages. Map, plates, bibliography.
Paper Rs 300/US$ 65.00 (Part I), Rs 200/US$40.00 (Part 2). (Avail-
able from: Publications Division, Institute of Asian Studies, 10th East
Street, Thiruvanmiyur, Madras 600041, India)
T o say it from the s tart: the reviewer congratulates T he Institute of Asian S tudies for making
available to the scholar and connoisseur of fine literature a very interesting body of Tamil
vernacular literature, part of which is orally transmitted. The publication reviewed here is
part of the series published by the Institute. Ten years ago Brenda BECKprovided scholars
with an introduction to the Annanmdr kata i (1982); this earlier publication (see review in
Asian Folklore Studies 43, 159-61) described the story's oral performance and performers,
examined the social and cultural contexts in which the work exists, introduced its multiple
variants, and traced some of its overall literary qualities. Now we have the full text, with theTamil original and Beck's English translation printed on facing pages. This format is to be
warmly welcomed, for it is the only one that allows the scholar to pursue further investiga-
tions; thus the AnnanmGr katai can now be compared to other South Indian works of litera-
ture, to classic and vernacular literatures in the wider Indian context, and to literatures of
other cultures.
Beck recorded the A nnanm dr k a t a i twice: once during a live performance in front of its
natural audience and once in "laboratory" conditions (that is, with the perform er in front of
a tape recorder). In the book under review the latter variant of the story is presented; the
former variant, which is double the length of the published version, is deposited for public
use in Th e Archive and Research Centre for Ethnomusicology, American Institute for Indian
Studies (B-29, Defence Colony, New Delhi 110 024), where both tapes and transcription are
available (there is as yet no translation) (iv). This reviewer hopes very much that t he longer
variant too will be made available in print. Detailed analysis and comparison of these twovariants from the same performer would provide invaluable information about performance
techniques, techniques of improvisation and of prosody, and many other features of Tamil
oral literature. Such investigations are badly needed to advance the general theory of oral
literature.
Obviously many and variegated tools are necessary to investigate a text like this. Ample
annotations are necessary to explain to the outsider the details of the specific culture-society
that carries the tradition. Some explanation of this type is provided in the footnotes, but
scholars will wish for much more. Detailed commentary is necessary in the future, as are
investigative tools, among them indications of formulas in English translation; concordances
for the text; annotated indexes of the proper names; transcriptions of the instrumental ac-
companiment; and musical notations (without which the prosody cannot be fully worked out,
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BOOK REVIEW S 349
since musical tone is often used by the performer to mold the sense of the text he performs,
be it in verse or in prose). Let us hope that the near future will bring us some of these
desiderata in companion volumes to Annanmdr katai . This task will keep a host of scholarsbusy.
We cannot emphasize enough the importance of this publication for the investigation of
Tamil literature, of Tamil oral and folk literary creativity, and of oral and folk literature in
general, nor can we sufficiently express the pleasure it will bring to lovers of literature
everywhere.
R EF ER EN C E C I TE D
BECK,BRENDAE. F.
1982 Th e three twins: Th e telling of a Sout h Indi an folk epic. Bloomington: Indiana
University Press.
Heda JASON
Jerusalem
Note on language:
The author is to be congratulated for this beautifully produced bilingual text and for its
idiomatic English translation. The printed Tamil text of the Annanmdr katai presents a
num ber of interes ting linguistic problems, including dialect and genre-specific features, some
familiar from other Tamil oral epics. In general, however, the published (dictated) text-especially the prose passages- reflects an unusually elevated style, morphologically conso-
nant with highlformal Ta mil prose. One wonders if this formalized language is not a second-
ary overlay on the recorded text recited in the longer version-or whether a process of
standardizat ion took place either duri ng the "laboratory" dictation or during the process of
editing the latter for publication (or at both stages). As it stands, the text is consistently
pitched in a more elevated register than even, for example, the Ponnalakar ennum kallalakar
ammanai , a published chapbook version of the ka ta i (R . G. Paty Company, Madras, various
printings), though there is no question that the Beck publication is by far the better, morecomplete text. Any "freezing" and transcription of oral performance inevitably transforms
the text, often in far-reaching ways; in the present case these considerations highlight the
need to produce a published version of the tapes in the Archive and Research Center for
Ethnomusicology in Delhi, which embody the longer 1965 version as recited in its village
context over nineteen nights.
David SCHULMAN
Hebrew University
Jerusalem
S M I T H ,MARY CARRO L L .The Wa rrior Code of India's Sacred Song. Harvard
Dissertations in Folklore and Oral Tradition. New York: Garland Pub-
lishing, 1992. vi + 159 pages. Appendix, bibliography. Hardcover
US837.00; ISBN 0-824&2898-8.
In The Warrior Code of India's Sacred Song Mary Carroll Smith addresses a question that
has long interested Indologists: What was the original epic story that formed the core of the
Mahdbhdrata? Her search was based on an examination of the prosody of the Mahdbhdrata's
stanzas. She first isolated those stanzas that are composed in various kinds of t r i ~ t u b hmeter
(older than the Sloka meter used in most of the Mahdbhdra ta ) , and discovered 4,500 stan-
zas- verses in Smith's parlance-equaling 18,000 lines. Of these, 2,000 stanzas (8,000
verses) were "irregular" (having verses with varying quantitie s of syllables) and similar to the